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Synonyms

funny

1 American  
[fuhn-ee] / ˈfʌn i /

noun

PLURAL

funnies
  1. a shell or light skiff rowed by one person with sculls.


funny 2 American  
[fuhn-ee] / ˈfʌn i /

adjective

funnier, funniest
  1. providing fun; causing amusement or laughter; amusing; comical.

    a funny remark;

    a funny person.

    Synonyms:
    humorous , facetious , witty , droll , ridiculous , farcical , comic , diverting
  2. attempting to amuse; facetious.

    Did you really mean that or were you just being funny?

  3. warranting suspicion; deceitful; underhanded.

    We thought there was something funny about those extra charges.

  4. Informal.  insolent; impertinent.

    Don't get funny with me, young man!

  5. curious; strange; peculiar; odd.

    Her speech has a funny twang.


noun

PLURAL

funnies
  1. Informal.  a funny remark or story; a joke.

    to make a funny.

  2. funnies,

    1. comic strips.

    2. Also called funny paper.  the section of a newspaper reserved for comic strips, word games, etc.

funny British  
/ ˈfʌnɪ /

adjective

  1. causing amusement or laughter; humorous; comical

  2. peculiar; odd

  3. suspicious or dubious (esp in the phrase funny business )

  4. informal  faint or ill

    to feel funny

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

noun

  1. informal  a joke or witticism

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
funny Idioms  

    More idioms and phrases containing funny


Usage

What is a basic definition of funny? Funny describes something that causes fun, especially laughter. Funny can describe someone who is trying to amuse others. It can also describe someone or something that is suspicious or odd. Funny has a few other senses as an adjective and a noun.Funny describes something that is amusing and causes people to laugh. Something that amuses people without causing laughter is usually said to be fun rather than funny. For example, a roller coaster would be called fun, while a knock-knock joke would be called funny. If something is not funny, it is unfunny.Real-life examples: Many people consider clowns, jokes, comedies, pranks, and Internet memes to be funny. These things cause most people to laugh.Used in a sentence: The comedian knew a lot of funny jokes. Funny also describes someone who is trying to get others to laugh or is trying to amuse them. This sense of funny is a synonym of facetious.Used in a sentence: Joan took the comment as an insult even though Luke was just trying to be funny. Funny also describes someone or something that is suspicious or underhanded. You might use this sense when you think something dishonest is going on. The phrase funny business is used in this sense to refer to criminal or unethical activity.Real-life examples: Rigged carnival games, overly friendly salespeople, and deals that seem too good to be true often cause people to think something funny is going on.Used in a sentence: We think something funny is going on at that store on the corner that is never open.Funny can also describe something that is strange, odd, or curious.Real-life examples: If your leg falls asleep, you will probably walk funny. Two tomatoes that grow together to make one tomato might have a funny shape.Used in a sentence: I think the speakers might be broken because the music sounds funny. 

Related Words

Funny, laughable, ludicrous refer to that which excites laughter. Funny and laughable are both applied to that which provokes laughter or deserves to be laughed at; funny is a colloquial term loosely applied and in popular use is commonly interchangeable with the other terms: a funny story, scene, joke; a laughable incident, mistake. That which is ludicrous excites laughter by its incongruity and foolish absurdity: The monkey's attempts to imitate the woman were ludicrous.

Other Word Forms

  • funnily adverb
  • funniness noun
  • unfunnily adverb
  • unfunniness noun

Etymology

Origin of funny1

First recorded in 1780–90; perhaps jocular use of funny 1

Origin of funny1

First recorded in 1730–40; fun + -y 1

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

There were some funny folks who got up onstage, but Cash shouted out to them, “You don’t need to be funny! This is just clearing!”

From Salon

The funnier part is when I have to call someone to look at the road because it is eroding or something, and then they show up and start laughing.

From The Wall Street Journal

The Guardian's five-star review said the show is "imaginatively staged, immaculately performed and utterly winning", while the Telegraph described it as a "funny, feel-good, family-friendly musical that looks set to run and run".

From BBC

While questioning the correct pronunciation of “niche,” Gaffigan noted that his other hobby, gardening, isn’t funny enough to support a special, and that his spirits-centric jokes weren’t for mass consumption.

From The Wall Street Journal

Our critic said the director’s “funniest and finest movie in many years is perfection all the way through.”

From The Wall Street Journal